Critics call on new leader to repair country’s image left tarnished by his predecessor’s deadly war on drugs
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. was sworn in as president of the Philippines in Manila on June 30. (Photo: AFP)
Ferdinand Marcos Jr. was sworn in as the 17th president of the Philippines in Manila on June 30, succeeding Rodrigo Duterte.
The 64-year-old officially began his six-year term at midday after a short visit to Duterte at the Malacanan Palace, the official residence of the president.
Marcos, who is nicknamed Bongbong, took his oath of office before the chief justice outside the National Museum surrounded by his family and closest political allies.
Among the family members, who included his wife and three sons, was his mother Imelda Marcos, wife of former dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr.
“This is a historic moment for us all. I feel it deep within me. You, the people, have spoken. And it is resounding. When my call for unity started to resonate with you, it did so because it echoed your yearnings, mirrored your sentiments, and expressed your hopes for family, for country, and for a better future,” Marcos Jr. said in his speech.
“I believe that if we but focus on the work at hand and the work that will come to hand, we will go very far under my watch.”
“I once knew a man who saw how little had been achieved since independence. He got it done. So it will be with his son. You will get no excuses from me”
Marcos Jr. said he understood the weight of the responsibilities and problems that face him.
He inherits a country trying to recover from the devastating impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic and battling debt and skyrocketing inflation.
“I fully understand the gravity of the responsibility that you have put on my shoulders. I do not put it lightly but I am ready for the task,” President Marcos said.
The president also paid tribute to his father, the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos Sr., who, according to him, got the job done with or without the support of his friends and allies.
“I once knew a man who saw how little had been achieved since independence. He got it done. So it will be with his son. You will get no excuses from me,” he said.
“You could not even pay your taxes. You could not even be truthful about your educational degree. Then you wish to revise history according to your whims? This is fascism. This is arrogance. This is hypocrisy”
Instead of enumerating more about his father’s legacy, Marcos Jr. encouraged Filipinos not to look at history but the future.
“I am not here to talk about the past. I am here to tell you about our future, a future of sufficiency even plenty of readily available ways and means to get done what needs doing by you, by me. We do not look back but ahead,” he said.
Human rights activist priest Father Flavie Villanueva, however, said Marcos’ words were empty rhetoric.
“You could not even pay your taxes. You could not even be truthful about your educational degree. Then you wish to revise history according to your whims? This is fascism. This is arrogance. This is hypocrisy,” Father Villanueva said.
Other critics called on the new president to repair the country’s image, which they say has been seriously tarnished by the former president’s deadly war on drugs that has seen thousands of drug suspects killed.
They also urged him to protect press freedom, which took a hit this week with the announcement by the broadcaster regulator that it will shut down the Rappler news website, which had been highly critical of the Duterte administration.
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